题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[单选]

We will not allow the land to get outof ().

A、waste

B、cultivation

C、abuse

D、training

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更多“We will not allow the la…”相关的问题
第1题
In recognition of donations ______ the National Museum, we will allow a tax deduction of up to twice the value of the donation.
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第2题
() an order for one hundred or more we allow a special discount of 3% for payment by L/C.

A、At

B、In

C、On

D、From

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第3题
_ an order for 100 pieces or more, we allow a special discount of 5% for payment by L/C.A.
_ an order for 100 pieces or more, we allow a special discount of 5% for payment by L/C.
A.At
B.In
C.On
D.From

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第4题
I‘ll leave him a note _______ he’ll know where we are。A. forB. thatC. so thatD. such th

A、 for

B、 that

C、 so that

D、 such that

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第5题
SMALL TALK BEFORE A MEETING This is a situation you’ve probably experienced many times: you arrive for a meeting ten minutes early. There are several people already there. You say hello and then … What do you talk about What do you say In this situation, you need to be able to make small talk. Small talk is an informal conversation. We use the term “small talk” because it is not about exchanging information or making decisions or having a serious discussion. It’s a way to avoid uncomfortable silences and build stronger relationships. Small talk might seem to be about nothing important, but it is important in itself. Being able to make small talk will allow you to make yourself part of a group. It will set the stage for more serious types of communication.
1.Small talk is a kind of formal dialog.()
2.The term “small talk” means there are only two persons in the dialog.()
3.Small talk is a useful ice-breaker and can build stronger relationships.()
4.Small talk is not at all important. ()
5.Making small talk will allow you to be a member of a group.()

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第6题
阅读理解

  Man has always wanted to fly. Some of the greatest men in history had thought about

  the problem. One of them, for example, was the great Italian artist, Leonardo Da Vinci. In

  the 16 th century he made designs for machines that would fly, but they were never built.

  Throughout history, other less famous men had wanted to fly. An example was a man

  in England 800 years ago. He made a pair of wings from chicken feathers. Then he fixed

  them to his body and jumped into air from a tall building. He did not fly very far. Instead,

  he fell to the ground and broke every bone of his body and rested in peace.

  The first real step took place in France, in 1783. Two brothers, the Montgolfiers,

  made a very large “hot air balloon”. They knew that hot air rises. Why not fill a balloon

  with it? The balloon was made of cloth and paper. In September of that year, the King and

  Queen of France came to see the balloon. They watched it carry the very first air

  passengers into the sky. The passengers were a sheep and a chicken. We do not know how

  they felt about the trip. But we do know that the trip lasted eight minutes and that the

  animals landed safely. Two months later, two men did the same thing. They rose above

  Paris in a balloon of the same kind. Their trip lasted twenty-five minutes and they traveled

  about.

  6. Leonardo Da Vinci _______.

  A. said that man would fly in the sky one day

  B. built a kind of machine which never flew

  C. made designs for flying machines

  D. drew many beautiful pictures of birds

  7. Eight hundred years ago an Englishman _______.

  A. made a kind of flying machine

  B. tried to fly with wings made of chicken feathers

  C. wanted to build a kind of balloon

  D. tried to fly on a large bird

  8. In fact, the Englishman who tried to fly _______.

  A. got badly wounded B. succeeded in flying

  C. lost his life D. flew only 8 minutes

  9. The very first air passengers in the balloon were _______.

  A. two animals B. the Montgolfiers

  C. two Frenchmen D. the King and Queen

  10. When did two Frenchmen rise above Paris?

  A. In December 1783. B. In September 1783.

  C. In the 17 th century. D. In November 1783.



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第7题
下列各 Most of us would shy away from making purchases in a foreign country ff we didnt know the exchange rate. Yet, ff privacy is the true currency of the Interuet, as many argue, millions of us are doing that very thing every day. i Meanwhile, Internet giants amend their privacy policies in ways that allow them to harvest and sell even more of our personal data. While privacy campaigners protest, users generally vote with their clicks and carry on regardless. So should we conclude the Interuet generation is happy to trade its privacy for free or cheaper Web services? Not according to Nicola Jentzsch of the German Institute of Research in Berlin, and colleagues, who last week published research showing that most people prefer to protect their personal data when given a choice and that a significant proportion are willing to pay extra to do so. The researchers directed 443 students to a website offering tickets for a real movie showing, sold by two different uendors (商贩). Although the tickets were subsidized, the volunteers, who were able to purchase one, two, or no tickets, had to pay most of the cost themselves. When both vendors offered tickeks at the same price but only one required customers to enter their cell phone number, the more privacy-friendly yendor got 83% of sales. When participants were offered the santo choice, but with an additional charge of 50 euro cents from the privacy-friendly cinema, its market share fell to 31%. "It turns out that when you are good on privacy you can charge more and make a greater profit," says Alessandro Acquisti of the University of Cambridge, one of the authors of the study, published by the European Network and Information Security Agency. "What people say in surveys is that they care about privacy, but what they actually do is spend their time constantly updating their status on Facebo0k," says Acquisti. "This has led some to conclude that people no longer care about privacy. This new data, along with similar work we have done in the U. S, shows this is not the case, and that the desire for privacy is not dead after all. " According to the passage, many people believe that
A.we can benefit from selling our personal data
B.Internet giants should perfect their privacy policies
C.our privacy is the true currency of the Internet
D.privacy campaigners should vote with their clicks

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第8题
The largest shark known to us, Megalodon, is extinct. Or is it? Carcharodon Megalodon, commonly known as Megalodon, is believed to have lived between I million and 5 million years ago and thought to have been 52 feet long. It is (or was) a shark that had a jaw 7 or more feet wide. Fairly recently, there has been some speculation about whether it is extinct or just out of reach. But few people believe that Megalodon has found a home deep in the ocean.
There are many known "Living Fossils": Coelacanth, Sea Cucumbers, Sea Urchins, Lobsters, Sea Stars. The common ones like lobsters and sea urchins are not really looked on as anything amazing. They've been around for thousands of years or more, and axe easily accessible to us. What if they weren't accessible and yet still existed? We would label them extinct. The discovery of a live Coelacanth, a fish long believed extinct, challenged some scientists' long-held beliefs on extinction. There have been recent discoveries Of incredibly large squid, and deep-sea fish never before seen by scientists.
In the 1960s the U.S. Navy set up underwater microphones around the world to track Soviet submarines. The network, known as the Sound Surveillance System, still lies deep below the ocean's surface in a layer of water known as the "deep sound channel'. The temperature and pressure of the channel allow sound waves to travel undisturbed. NOAA's Acoustic Monitoring Project has been using the Sound Surveillance System to listen for changes in ocean structure like ocean currents or volcanic activity. Most of the sounds recorded are common and of no concern. One sound, identified in 1977 by U.S. Navy "spy" sensors, was odd. It was obviously a marine animal but the call was more powerful than any of the calls made by any other reported sea creature. It was too big for a whale. Could it be a deep-sea monster? One possibility was a giant squid, but no one is sure. It was named "Bloop". Could it be Megalodon? If Megalodon is still alive down in the bottom of the ocean, we may some day soon discover it. Then what? Deep sea diving will never be the same, that's for sure!
The following is commonly known EXCEPT ________.
A.Megalodon, the largest shark, is extinct
B.Megalodon is not extinct but just out of reach
C.Megalodon was 52 feet long and had a jaw 7 or more feet wide
D.Megalodnn lived between several million years ago
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第9题
The largest shark known to us, Megalodon, is extinct. Or is it? Carcharodon Megalodon, commonly known as Megalodon, is believed to have lived between 1 million and 5 million years ago and thought to have been 52 feet long. It is (or was) a shark that had a jaw 7 or more feet wide. Fairly recently, there has been some speculation about whether it is extinct or just out of reach. But few people believe that Megalodon has found a home deep in the ocean.
There are many known "Living Fossils": Coelacanth, Sea Cucumbers, Sea Urchins, Lobsters, Sea Stars. The common ones like lobsters and sea urchins are not really looked on as anything amazing. They've been around for thousands of years or more, and are easily accessible to us. What if they weren't accessible and yet still existed? We would label them extinct. The discovery of a live Coelacanth, a fish long believed extinct, challenged some scientists' long-held beliefs on extinction. There have been recent discoveries of incredibly large squid, and deep-sea fish never before seen by scientists.
In the 1960s the U.S. Navy set up underwater microphones around the world to track Soviet submarines. The network, known as the Sound Surveillance System, still lies deep below the ocean's surface in a layer of water known as the "deep sound channel". The temperature and pressure of the channel allow sound waves to travel undisturbed. NOAA's Acoustic Monitoring Project has been using the Sound Surveillance System to listen for changes in ocean structure like ocean currents or volcanic activity. Most of the sounds recorded are common and of no concern. One sound, identified in 1977 by U.S. Navy "spy" sensors, was odd. It was obviously a marine animal but the call was more powerful than any of the calls made by any other reported sea creature. It was too big for a whale. Could it be a deep-sea monster? One possibility was a giant squid, but no one is sure. It was named "Bloop". Could it be Megalodon? If Megalodon is still alive down in die bottom of the ocean, we may some day soon discover it. Then what? Deep sea diving will never be the same, that's for sure!
The following is commonly known EXCEPT ______.
A.Megalodon, the largest shark, is extinct
B.Megalodon is not extinct but just out of reach
C.Megalodon was 52 feet long and had a jaw 7 or more feet wide
D.Megalodon lived between several million years ago
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第10题
Zoos are among mankind's oldest institutions, dating back at least 4,500 years, and probably more. Across the world they have brought together and displayed live wild animals for people to look at and over the years hundreds of millions have. Any institution with so long a history and so universally attended must reach something in people deeper than idle curiosity. Since it is fashionable to speak of roots today, it might be suggested that zoos allow us to stay in touch with our most primitive roots in a primeval world where human survival depended on knowing the shapes and habits of wild animals. So important were wild creatures to our distant ancestors that they were the most frequent subjects of paintings on cave walls, formed the basis for virtually all early religions, and were in numerous instances worshipped as gods.
Now our survival is threatened more by what we ourselves have worked, and by the stresses of living among these creations, than it is by wild animals to whom we relegate less and less living space with each passing year. In this world the need for good zoological gar-dens is urgent. The exponential growth of human population and the ever-increasing sprawl of cities does more than rob land from wildlife: it pushes the animals father away from city dwellers. People live in brick, concrete, and glass environments where they lose all touch with wilderness; children grow up who have never tried to catch a frog, never seen a hawk soar or a deer step daintily into a forest clearing—let alone watched a herd of elephants amble across the river or a pride of lions stalk prey.
People who have the time and money can take an occasional trip to the remaining wilderness and find, in places where wild animals still live, the renewal of spirit that comes from prolonged visits to wild country. For millions of others who are unable to leave the cities or can't afford to, good zoos laid out among plants and trees can bring what conservationist Lan Player calls "a taste of wilderness''. Perhaps more important in the long run, zoos can help give deprived people an awareness that we share the world with many other animals and should have a decent regard for their worth and right to live. If zoos did no more than accomplish these two ends, they would serve a noble purpose.
As it happens, however, today's zoos can do far more. They can become breeding centers for those wild species whose continued existence has become precarious. The team "captive breeding" has been used to describe this new role of zoos, and this book describes the effort the most important task that zoos have yet undertaken.
In the second sentence of the first paragraph, "hundreds of millions" refers to the great number of_____ .
A.mankind's various institutions
B.zoos across the world
C.live wild animals displayed
D.people who have visited zoos
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第11题
Public response to technology often varies in peculiar ways. While biotechnology, for example, gives rise to organized opposition, information technology, which is actually no less invasive (侵害的) ,no more harmless, is welcomed or, at the least, accepted with comparatively little debate. Information technologies from computers and communications ---- have obviously had an overwhelming social impact and their benefits hardly need explanations, but they have also disturbed privacy and threatened civil liberties, computerized data banks empower bureaucratic authorities by providing easy access to personal information-about credit ratings, social performance, housing and medical histories. They will allow access to genetic figures, providing information about our tendencies to employers, insurers, product advertisers, banks and other institutions that exercise control over our lives. Computerization allows the severe extension of advertising through telemarketing requests that shamelessly intrude our home life. Information technologies have displaced people from jobs and turned potentially skilled workers into low-level computer technologies. Computers have facilitated the work of scholars, but also turned them into typists; yet one hears hardly a complaint. They have turned the simple act of buying a plane ticket into an endless manipulation (控制) , but we welcome the so-called convenience. They have encouraged new forms of crime and fraud(欺诈) , but we describe them with grudging admiration. They have allowed new types of evil weaponry. But we call them "smart bombs". Perhaps the most important, information technologies have extended the power of the mass media, creating unusual possibilities for political manipulation reducing accountability (有责任,有义务 ), and changing the nature of political life. It is true that there are critiques(批评) of information technologies from those professionally concerned about their problematic(有问题的) legal, social and political implications. There is a near total absence, however, of organized public concern about technologies with profound and problematic implications.
11.According to the author, information technology_____________.
A. Has nothing positive
B. Has not given rise to organized opposition
C. is less harmless than biotechnology
D. is accepted without any debate
12.By the term "computerization the author means that______________.
A. all of industrial work is controlled by computer
B. computer plays an important role in our economic life
C. computer becomes an essential part in our everyday life
D. all scientific work is done with the help of computer
13.What worries the author most is that ______________..
A. political manipulate through mass media will become normal in our political life
B. our privacy will be threaded by businessmen
C. there will be more crimes and frauds by high tech
D. new types of evil weaponry will be invented
14.Those who criticizes information technologies are _____________.
A. leaders of the organized opposition to information technologies
B. persons engaged in professional works
C. those who benefit most from information technologies
D. those who benefit least from information technologies
15.(多选)The benefits brought by information technology is ____________.
A. quite evident
B. hard to explain
C. being overcome by social opposition
D. to benefit few people

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